New York Daily News

Cops are using and sharing sealed arrest records illegally allowing them to level harsher penalties against New Yorkers — especially on minorities, according to bombshell lawsuit filed Tuesday in Manhattan Supreme Court.

Despite a state law requiring the NYPD to destroy all records — including fingerprints, mugshots and arrest reports — if the suspect is found not guilty or the charges are dropped, police keep the records and use them to investigate and charge people, according to the suit.

A Wappingers Falls man, identified in the lawsuit only by the initials R.C., says he fell victim to this unlawful police policy when he was rousted from his sleep at his mother’s home in 2015 by detectives accusing him of an armed robbery.

Though the man was in Danbury, Conn., at the time of the crime, a witness picked out his mugshot from a sealed arrest because he fit the description of the one of the gunmen — a white Hispanic male, 15 to 19 with black hair, according to court records.

The charges were dismissed in November 2016, but not before R.C. lost his job and was forced to give up his college plans after a year of court dates, he said in the suit.

The only way police can access sealed records is by getting a court order, but a series of interconnected NYPD databases allow them routine access, the lawsuit, which seeks class-action status, charges.

Prosecutors, armed with wrongly disclosed info, also could use it during criminal proceedings — putting arrestees at a life-altering unfair disadvantage.

Criminal discovery, which could include the fact that the arrest was based on unlawfully accessed records, is often not shared with defense lawyer until months into the case, litigators claim.

Fingerprints and mugshots taken during these arrests are also supposed to be destroyed, court papers state.Image by: Jeffrey Coolidge/Getty Images

“In many cases, individuals may accept plea agreements without any knowledge that the prosecution’s plea offer may have been shaped by the NYPD’s unlawful disclosure of sealed arrest information,” the suit says.

Civil rights lawyers lauded the suit, saying it’s been an issue in the criminal justice system for a while.

“It’s a widespread problem,” said Darius Charney, a lawyer with the Center for Constitutional Rights. “Hopefully, it’s going to bring about changes that are long overdue to NYPD practice.”